I'm surprised no one has mentioned Illumination (Despicable Me)'s OTHER 2016 movie about animals, Sing.
It looks far more "meh" than anything legitimately bad. I don't want to say this is a case of Finding Nemo and Shark Tale to Zootopia and this thing, but there's some intent there. The concept doesn't seem to carry a film all its own. And even then, Glee was a flash in the pan, Smash was a disaster, and American Idol
finally stops dodging the old timey Vaudeville hook it somehow was avoiding the past 8 years. Sure, The Voice is still around, but a singing competition film feels, well...not like someone late to the party. Maybe someone who was on the
way to the party, got a concussion and landed in a coma for a decade and ran to the same party as soon as he woke up
but just before he finds out the place it was being held has been bulldozed and a condo complex is in its place.
That said, I think Illumitoon has so far made 3 and a half good movies so far. The half is the
good part of the Lorax. Secret Life of Pets looks like it could go either way from pretty good to not really. This one doesn't look good outside of the animation. It's not quite Zootopia on a visual level, but it's still a good looking visually film. This seems like a film I'd just flat out not see, but at the same time I don't really have anything to say about it that isn't already obvious. But it just doesn't give me that feeling of "THEY MADE THIS!?!?!? This somehow managed to get through the labyrinth of other cartoonists/animators with stronger ideas
?!?!??!" I get when i see something truly awful.
And speaking of truly awful. I got some bad news. Remember the Norm of the North film everyone hates? Well, it actually wound up making
some money. Sure, it's due to the incredibly small budget that would have been recouped even if it was DTV, but doesn't that just stick in your craw? I'm sure they had a heck of an advertising budget they blew, and I'm sure if that is counted in it would have still lost a small amount of cash. Still, you
know they released it when they knew it wasn't going to make much money anyway, and even a small loss is better than a massive "Victor Frankenstein" or "Lone Ranger" black hole. Something tells me the steady march of lousier DTV's will continue no matter what. And poor timing kills The Good Dinosaur. Yeah, that's not a travesty at all.